Infant Understanding of Different Forms of Social Exclusion

In a series of eye-tracking studies, we investigated preverbal infants’ understanding of social exclusion by analyzing their gaze behaviors as they were familiarized with animations depicting social acceptance and explicit or implicit social exclusion. In addition, we implemented preferent...

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Main Author: Claire Nicole Prendergast
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2019-09-01
Series:Brain Sciences
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2076-3425/9/9/227
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spelling doaj-5234b1d7a3cd4835a0deff31314223ae2020-11-25T01:17:23ZengMDPI AGBrain Sciences2076-34252019-09-019922710.3390/brainsci9090227brainsci9090227Infant Understanding of Different Forms of Social ExclusionClaire Nicole Prendergast0Department of Psychology, University of Oslo, Forskningsveien 3A, 0323 Oslo, NorwayIn a series of eye-tracking studies, we investigated preverbal infants&#8217; understanding of social exclusion by analyzing their gaze behaviors as they were familiarized with animations depicting social acceptance and explicit or implicit social exclusion. In addition, we implemented preferential reaching and anticipatory looking paradigms to further assess understanding of outcomes. Across all experiments (<i>n</i> = 81), it was found that 7&#8722;9 month-old infants exhibited non-random visual scanning and gaze behaviors and responded systematically and above random chance in their choice of character and, to some extent, in their anticipation of the movement of a neutral character during a test trial. Together, the results suggest that not only do preverbal infants follow and understand third party social events, such as acceptance and exclusion, but that they also update their representations of particular characters as events unfold and evaluate characters on the basis of their actions, as well as the consequences of those actions.https://www.mdpi.com/2076-3425/9/9/227social exclusionsocial cognitive developmentinfant gaze behaviorpreferential reaching paradigmanticipatory looking paradigm
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Claire Nicole Prendergast
spellingShingle Claire Nicole Prendergast
Infant Understanding of Different Forms of Social Exclusion
Brain Sciences
social exclusion
social cognitive development
infant gaze behavior
preferential reaching paradigm
anticipatory looking paradigm
author_facet Claire Nicole Prendergast
author_sort Claire Nicole Prendergast
title Infant Understanding of Different Forms of Social Exclusion
title_short Infant Understanding of Different Forms of Social Exclusion
title_full Infant Understanding of Different Forms of Social Exclusion
title_fullStr Infant Understanding of Different Forms of Social Exclusion
title_full_unstemmed Infant Understanding of Different Forms of Social Exclusion
title_sort infant understanding of different forms of social exclusion
publisher MDPI AG
series Brain Sciences
issn 2076-3425
publishDate 2019-09-01
description In a series of eye-tracking studies, we investigated preverbal infants&#8217; understanding of social exclusion by analyzing their gaze behaviors as they were familiarized with animations depicting social acceptance and explicit or implicit social exclusion. In addition, we implemented preferential reaching and anticipatory looking paradigms to further assess understanding of outcomes. Across all experiments (<i>n</i> = 81), it was found that 7&#8722;9 month-old infants exhibited non-random visual scanning and gaze behaviors and responded systematically and above random chance in their choice of character and, to some extent, in their anticipation of the movement of a neutral character during a test trial. Together, the results suggest that not only do preverbal infants follow and understand third party social events, such as acceptance and exclusion, but that they also update their representations of particular characters as events unfold and evaluate characters on the basis of their actions, as well as the consequences of those actions.
topic social exclusion
social cognitive development
infant gaze behavior
preferential reaching paradigm
anticipatory looking paradigm
url https://www.mdpi.com/2076-3425/9/9/227
work_keys_str_mv AT clairenicoleprendergast infantunderstandingofdifferentformsofsocialexclusion
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